Introduction Concerns about AIDS can make needlesticks, slips and spills alarming if you work as a first responder. Yet AIDS isn’t the only bloodborne.

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction Concerns about AIDS can make needlesticks, slips and spills alarming if you work as a first responder. Yet AIDS isn’t the only bloodborne."— Presentation transcript:

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Introduction Concerns about AIDS can make needlesticks, slips and spills alarming if you work as a first responder. Yet AIDS isn’t the only bloodborne threat you face. In fact, you are more likely to be infected in the line of duty by the hepatitis B virus (HBV), which is just as deadly. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has issued a standard that is designed to protect you. It details ways that you and your employer can work together to substantially reduce your risk of contracting a bloodborne disease on the job. You are covered by the standard if it is reasonably anticipated that you could be exposed to bloodborne pathogens as a result of performing your job duties.

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Bloodborne Diseases Bloodborne diseases that you could be exposed to on the job include non-A hepatitis, non-B hepatitis, hepatitis B, and delta hepatitis, as well as syphilis, malaria and human immunodeficiency virus. The two most significant are hepatitis B (HBV) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).

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HBV Hepatitis means “inflammation of the liver.” Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is the major infectious bloodborne hazard you face on the job. It infects approximately 8,700 healthcare workers a year, resulting in more than 400 hospitalizations and 200 deaths. If you become infected with HBV: You may suffer from flu-like symptomss becoming so severe that you may require hospitalization. You may have no symptoms at all being unaware that you are infected. Your blood, saliva and other body fluids may be infectious. You may spread the virus to sexual partners, family members, and even unborn infants. HBV may severely damage your liver, leading to cirrhosis and almost certain death.

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HIV The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) attacks the body’s immune system, causing the disease known as AIDS, or Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome. Currently, there is no vaccine to prevent infection. A person infected with HIV: May carry the virus without developing symptoms for several years. Will eventually develop AIDS. Many suffer from flu-like symptoms, fever, diarrhea and fatigue. May develop AIDS-related illnesses including neurological problems, cancer and other opportunistic infections. HIV is transmitted primarily through sexual contact, but may also be transmitted through contact with blood and some body fluids. HIV is not transmitted by touching or working around people who carry the disease.

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Workplace Transmission In the workplace, bloodborne pathogens are transmitted in the same ways. HBV, HIV and other pathogens may be present in: Body fluids such as saliva, semen, vaginal secretions, cerebrospinal fluid, synovial fluid, pleural fluid, peritoneal fluid, pericardial fluid, amniotic flluid, and any other body fluids visibly contaminated with blood. Unfixed tissue or organs other than intact skin from living or dead humans.

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Means of Transmission Bloodborne pathogens may enter your body and infect you through a variety of means including: 1. An accidental injury with a sharp object contaminated with infectious material –Sharps include: Needles Broken glass Anything that can pierce, puncture or cut your skin 2. Open cuts, nicks and skin abrasions, even dermatitis and acne, as well as the mucouss membranes of your mouth, eyes or nose. 3. Indirect transmission, such as touching a contaminated object or surface and transferring the infectious material to your mouth, eyes, nose or open skin Contaminated Surfaces HBV can survive on environmental surfaces dried and at room temperatures for at least one week. Make sure after an accident that the area is thoroughly cleaned and disinfected.

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Exposure Control Plan The risks of bloodborne diseases in the workplace are quite serious. Yet you can learn effective ways of minimizing them. A good place to start is with your employer’s written Exposure Control Plan. A copy should be available for you to consult at your workplace during your work shift. It will cover: –1. Identification of employees covered by the standard. –2. Specific measures you and your facility must take to minimize your risk of exposure. –3. Procedures to follow if there is an exposure incident.

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Universal Precautions You may not be able to tell for sure which people carry bloodborne pathogens by taking a medical history or by examination. Both HIV and HBV infect people of all ages, of all socioeconomic classes, from every state and territory, and from rural areas as well as cities. –Many people carry bloodborne infections without visible symptoms. –Many people carry bloodborne infections without even knowing it. Using Universal Precautions resolves this uncertainty by requiring you to treat all human blood and certain human body fluids as if they were known to infected with HIV, HBV or other bloodborne pathogens. You can’t identify every person who may transmit infection. Yet you can’t afford not to since it takes just one exposure to become infected.

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Reducing Your Risk Five major tactics reduce your risk of exposure to bloodborne pathogens on the job: –Engineering controls –Employee work practices –Personal protective equipment –Housekeeping –Hepatitis B vaccine. Alone, none of these approaches is 100 percent effective. They must be used together, like five protective barriers against infection.

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Engineering Controls Engineering controls are physical or mechanical systems your employer provides to eliminate hazards at their source. Their effectiveness usually depends on you. –Example: Specially marked bags for contaminated first aid materials provide no protection unless you remember to put all towels, gauze pads and other contaminated items into them.

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Work Practice Controls These are specific procedures you must follow on the job to reduce your exposure to bloodborne pathogens or infectious materials. –Needlesticks –To avoid needlesticks: Do not bend, recap, shear or break contaminated needles and other sharps. Recap or remove contaminated needles from disposable syringes only when medically necessary. To recap needles, use a mechanical device or a one-handed technique. Place disposable and reusable contaminated sharps in an appropriate puncture-resistant, leak-proof container immediately after use. Report any sharps containers that are mounted too high or otherwise not easily accessible.

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Handwashing –If infectious material gets on your hands, the sooner you wash it off, the less chance you have of becoming infected. Handwashing keeps you from transferring contamination from your hands to other areas of your body or other surfaces you may contact later. Every time you remove your gloves you must wash your hands with non- abrasive soap and running water as soon as you possibly can. If skin or mucous membranes come in direct contact with blood, wash or flush with water as soon as possible. Where handwashing facilities are not available, such as an emergency medical van, your employer will provide an antiseptic hand cleanser or antiseptic towelettes. Use these as a temporary measure only. You must still wash your hands with soap and running water as soon as you can.

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Personal Hygiene –Additional self-protective controls should be followed to protect you: When performing procedures involving blood or other postentially infectious materials, minimize splashing, spraying, spattering and generation of droplets. Do not eat, drink, smoke, apply cosmetics or lip balmss, or handle contact lenses where you may be exposed to blood or other potentially infectious materials. Avoid petroleum-based lubricants that may eat through latex gloves. Applying hand cream is OK if you thoroughly wash your hands first. Don’t keep food and drinks in refrigerators, freezers, cabinets or on shelves, countertops or benchtops where blood or other potentially infectious materials may be present.

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If your job requires you to be exposed to bloodborne pathogens, your employer will: Provide appropriate protective equipment at no cost to you. Clean, launder, repair, replace or dispose of protective equipment at no cost to you.

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General Rules on PPE –You and your employer must follow these rules to insure that your protective equipment does its job. You must be trained to use equipment properly. Protective equipment must be appropriate protective equipment each time you perform a task. Your equipment must be free of physical flaws that could compromise safety. Your gloves must fit properly. If, when wearing equipment, it is penetrated by blood or other potentially infectious materials, remove it as soon as feasible. Before leaving the work area, remove all protective equipment and place in the designated area or container for washing, decontamination or disposal.

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The exception to the Rule –If you believe using protective equipment would prevent proper delivery of healthcare or jeopardize your safety or a co-worker’s, you may temporarily and briefly abandon its use in an emergency. After the incident, your employer must investigate the circumstances to determine if such a situation could be prevented in the future. In all other circumstancess, wearing appropriate personal protective equipment is not only your best option--it’s your only option.

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Resuscitation devices –Mechanical emergency respiratory devices and pocket masks are types of personal protective equipment designed to isolate you from contact with a victim’s saliva during resuscitation. –Avoid unprotected mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. The person may expel saliva, blood or other fluids during resuscitation.

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Gloves Gloves are the most widely used form of personal protective equipment. They act as a primary barrier between your hands and bloodborne pathogens. Latex or nylon gloves are used most frequently. Heavy duty utility gloves should be used for housekeeping duties. –Here’s how to use them: You must wear gloves when you anticipate hand contact with blood, potentially infectious materials, mucous membranes or non-intact skin. If you are allergic to latex or nylon gloves, your employer will provide hypoallergenic gloves, glove liners, powderless gloves or another alternative. Since gloves can be torn or punctured by sharps, bandage ancy cuts before being gloved.

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Replace disposable single-use gloves, such as examination gloves, as soon as possible if contaminated, torn, punctured or damaged in any way. Never wash or decontaminate for reuse. Utility gloves may be decontaminated and reused unless they are cracked, peeling, torn, punctured, or no longer provide barrier protection.

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Glove removal –You must follow a safe procedure for glove removal, being careful that no pathogens from the soiled gloves contact your hands. With both hands gloved, peel one off from top to bottom and hold it in the gloved hand. With the exposed hand, peel the second glove from the inside, tucking the first glove inside the second. Dispose of the entire bundle promptly. Remove gloves when they become contaminated, damaged or before leaving the work area. Wash your hands thoroughly.

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Good Housekeeping Good housekeeping protectsss every worker, and it is every worker’s responsibility. –General Housekeeping –Your facility’s Exposure Control Plan lists housekeeping specifics. Here are general rules for housekeeping staff: Clean and decontaminate at the end of each work shift. Clean all equipment and environmental working surfaces as soon as possible after contact with potentially infectious materials. Do not pick up broken glass which may be contaminated with gloved or bare hands. Use tongs or a brush and a dustpan. Place contaminated sharps and infectious wates in designated sharps containers. The containers should be labeled or color-coded leak-proof containers that are closable and easily accessible to those who use them. Do not allow containers to over-fill.

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Handle contaminated laundry as little as possible and with minimal agitation. Place soiled laundry in labeled or color-coded leak-proof bags or containers without sorting or rinsing. –Read the Label –Biohazard warning signs protect you from bloodborne hazards: Bags or containers bearing the biohazard sign tell you when the containers hold blood or other potentially infectious materials. Warning labels are also used to designate contaminated equipment.

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HBV Vaccination If you are designated first reponder, your employer will make the hepatitis B vaccination available to you at no cost. The vaccine is administered by three injections over a six-month period. Today’s vaccines are safe and effective. –Those now used in the U.S. are made from yeast and cannot be infected with HIV or other bloodborne pathogens. Over two million U.S. healthcare workers have already been vaccinated. –The complete series of HBV vaccination is 85 to 97 percent effective at protecting you from getting HBV or becoming a carrier for nine years or longer. You should not be vaccinated if: –You have already received the complete hepatitis B vaccination series. –Antibody testing reveals you are immune. –You should not receive the vaccination for other specific medical reasons.

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Playing It Safe Additional facts you should know: –If you are exposed, report the incident immediately to your supervisor. –If you consent, your employer will provide you with a confidential medical evaluation, including blood tests, any available post-exposure preventive treatment and follow-up counseling. –Your employer will provide you with a free training program during working hours before you assume a job with occupational exposure and annually thereafter. –Training will tell you more about bloodborne diseases, how to use personal protective equipment and how to report an exposure incident. It will also detail your rightss and responsibilitiess as a worker. –The Bloodborne Pathogens Standard contains special requirements for those who work in laboratories and production facilities involved in bloodborne pathogens research.

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Rise To The Challenge It is possible to protect yourself from bloodborne pathogens on the job by knowing the facts and taking proper precautions. Working together with your employer, you can do it. As a first responder, you can be confident in your ability to care safely for the well-being of others and yourself.